Paint it Lucky
Well-Known Member
Don't know if anyone if familiar with the term 'conditioned suppression' (look up Heather Simpson's work) but basically when a horse (or indeed human or any animal) is continually subjected to forcefull methods that it is made to give into (eg, harsh training, continual punishment etc), the horse eventually gives up fighting and just does whatever it is told. It will either go into a state of hyper-vigilance, always trying to work out what the human wants in order to avoid further mistreatment (and under constant stress as a result). Or will simply stop offering any new behaviours, becoming dull and listless (how many of us have seen this in old riding school horses, continually pulled around, kicked, yanked etc for no clear reason (other than the rider doesn't know what they're doing) and so the horse simply shuts off as a survival mechanism. Both these states are obviously bad for the horses health, the horses are far more prone to colic, stress related illness etc. Often the horses may appear fine on the outside, they never behave naughtily, wildly etc, but really they are not fine at all.